MPO connectors support different polarity methods. Type A is straight across, Type B is crossover, and Type C is pairwise flip. Polarity determines which fiber in the multi-fiber array maps to which port at the other end. Wrong polarity causes transmit/receive mismatch.
Mode affects distance and bandwidth. Multimode fiber is well suited for relatively short distances typically within data center, campus, or building. Single mode allows far longer reach. Mode choice impacts connector selection, transceiver compatibility, and allowable loss.
The number of optical fibers in the cable (8, 12, 24, etc) has practical consequences. More fibers mean more capacity but also possibly increased skew, insertion loss, and cost. Understand how many fibers your equipment uses now and might use in future before selecting count.
MPO connectors come in male and female types. Correct alignment between them (with key up / key down) is necessary. FC connectors also have specific gender or polish type. Matching gender matters to ensure physical mating and low loss.
Within a hybrid trunk cable it's important that fiber mapping (which fiber is which in the bundle) is consistent and documented. This helps when replacing parts, tracing failures, or upgrading. Using consistent numbering and labeling helps avoid mistakes.
Multiple fiber lanes in parallel require attention to skew, meaning differential delays across lanes. Higher skew can impact synchronization in parallel optics. High quality trunk cables minimize skew through tight control in manufacturing and proper handling in installation.
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